From house arrest, Mr Green told the BBC: "I think it's obvious that you can see an awakening within the Israeli public. You can see that more and more people are taking a position."
Speaking 20 years after the show ended, Wendt said people still recognised him because the show had been a once-in-a-generation hit."I live just a few blocks from where Friends was shot and from where Seinfeld was shot and I'd see the helicopters going over the studio and I'd think, wow, I'm one of a few dozen people who have a unique perspective on what all these people are going through," he reflected.
Cheers Boston, the pub that inspired the hit television show, paid tribute by sharing a picture of Norm's spot at the bar."George wasn't just an actor - he was a symbol of comfort, laughter, and that familiar feeling of walking into a place where everybody knows your name," they said.
"To George: thank you for the laughs, the memories, and the legacy you leave behind. You'll always have a stool at our bar."Their
and, pertinently, they are back in the Champions League.
With that, certain doors swing open. Finances are stronger; you can attract players – or managers in Spurs' case - who wouldn't have necessarily given your club a second glance."The future is expansion," he says, "raising capital to really, really push the brand globally".
"I think it's the moment in time - and it's the right moment."The Charles Dickens Museum in London will celebrate its 100th birthday by offering free entry to his former home and a chance to meet the author's living descendants.
Visitors on 9 June will find a living member of Dickens' family in each of the historic rooms, where they can hear talks and readings.The Charles Dickens Museum, at 48 Doughty Street, is the only surviving London house in which Charles Dickens lived and where he wrote the stories